How robots and other tech can make the fight against coronavirus safer
Humans may sometimes regard robots with apprehension or resentment over the increasing automation of labor, but the coronavirus pandemic is showing how the two can work together in new ways that might save lives during a crisis. Around the globe, robots and other technologies, like drones and telehealth devices, are being used in a variety of settings and capacities to assist in the COVID-19 response since there is a level of elevated risk for human workers. Automated devices have delivered meals to quarantined travelers in a Chinese hotel; enforced curfews in Tunisia; scanned visitors for fevers entering a South Korean hospital; monitored patients in a hard-hit Italian city; and tracked social distancing compliance from the skies in a number of cities around the world, including Elizabeth, New Jersey. Many of the technologies were available commercially prior to the coronavirus outbreak, said Texas A&M University professor Robin Murphy, who studies how robots can be deployed during disasters. But now, "they are being used 24/7 and adapted to fit the needs of those using them," Murphy added.
May-5-2020, 03:54:59 GMT
- AI-Alerts:
- 2020 > 2020-05 > AAAI AI-Alert for May 5, 2020 (1.00)
- Country:
- North America > United States > New Jersey > Union County > Elizabeth (0.25)
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- Technology:
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Robots (1.00)